August 23, 2010 Issue

   
 

SWJ Anniversary Party

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Kid Rock

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Summer Flower Show

Thursday, September 2nd

10:00am - 6:00pm

Sparky the Sea Lion Show

Thursday, September 2nd

11:30am - 11:45am


The buzz

44TH & NICOLLET
The owners of the former Westrum’s Tavern at 4415 Nicollet Ave. withdrew their application for a liquor license and instead applied for a beer and wine license with conditions, one of which is holding a community meeting after six months of operation.

Business and building co-owner Heidi Fields plans to open a new restaurant and bar called Driftwood Tavern at the site. The concept is controversial in the Kingfield neighborhood because of crime and noise problems Westrum’s created before the city shut it down earlier this year.

Approval of the new business and building owners’ initial application for a liquor license was delayed when they started interior demolition and minor construction without first pulling a permit, said city license inspector George Pridmore. They have since pulled five permits.

Fields said the withdrawal of the liquor license application and switch to beer and wine wasn’t made for any particular reason.

“We don’t really have a reason,” she said.

The Minneapolis City Council approved the new application. As soon as construction is completed and passes inspection and the city’s Division of Environmental Health signs off on it, the business owners will be eligible to have their beer and wine license issued, Pridmore said.

Fields said she did not have an estimated opening for Driftwood Tavern.

— Jake Weyer

50th and Penn
Duetta, a gift shop that sells a combination of antique and artisan goods in an atmosphere reminiscent of a European shop, opened at 50th Street and Penn Avenue in early September.

Co-owner Julie Louris, a seamstress and former vintage clothing storeowner, crafted many of the shop’s decorations and cultivated a wide selection of vintage goods, including vintage ribbon, on frequent trips to France, Spain and Portugal.

Duetta also features hand-crafted European jewelry otherwise sold in only San Francisco and New York City galleries.

“The goal is that we don’t carry anything that anybody else has. We don’t want to be competing with our neighbors. We just want to be able to offer something new and fresh that you’re not able to find anywhere [else],” said co-owner and former art gallery manager Tabitha Courtemanche.

Duetta opened its doors Sept. 19, but a grand opening event will be held in November. Store hours are 11 a.m.–7 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. Call 612-929-2325 for more information.

— Anna Rockne

24th & Lyndale
Unable to make sales in the slumping condo market, developers of Le Parisien Flats on the 2300 block of Lyndale Avenue have decided to start leasing the development’s 13 units.

“With all the drastic changes and the downturn of the industry, people can’t sell their own homes to buy condos,” said Le Parisien developer and owner Mark Dziuk. “So we’ve decided to pull it off the market, rent for a while and see what the market does.”

Condos were priced from $295,000 to $477,700, according to the development’s website. Rental rates for the same units now range from $1,700 to $3,506. Unit sizes range from 916 square-feet to 1,673 square-feet.

Le Parisien is a completed four-story European-themed development with a large retail section. Construction of the building started in 2005 when the market was still hot. The slowdown during the past year has caused problems for many developers in Minneapolis, some of whom have had to put projects on hold and others that are waiting to build.

The rental market is strong and several developers have apartment complexes in the works, but few have switched existing condos to rental units. Dziuk said the switch at Le Parisien is not necessarily a long-term plan.

“We need to wait for the market to heal itself,” he said.

Home inventory in the Twin Cities was at a record high at the end of August with 34,808 units on the market, according to a recent report from the Minneapolis Area Association of Realtors. Southwest had 611 single-family homes on the market and an additional 530 townhouse or condominium units.

Southwest home sales at the end of August were 14 percent behind the same time last year, but the average sale price increased roughly 6 percent. The number of new Southwest listings at the end of August was nearly 16 percent behind the same time last year.


LAKE & GRAND
Schatzlein Saddle Shop will celebrate a century of business Oct. 14 with a block party in front of the store at 413 W. Lake St.

The 400 block of the street will be closed from noon to 3 p.m. for live entertainment, pony rides, historic exhibits, a horse display and anniversary cake.

Schatzlein is a family-owned English- and Western-saddle shop that carries a variety of leather items, riding equipment and apparel. For more information about Schatzlein Saddle Shop, call 825-2459 or visit www.Ssaddle.com.

— Jake Weyer


Read more stories about: Kingfield neighborhood

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